Sunday, December 21, 2025
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“Avatar” Director James Cameron, After Years of Filming Water Scenes: “I have the concentration of a goldfish at this point”

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At a recent Q&A for “Avatar: The Way of Water,” with the cast, actor Sam Worthington — who reprises his role from the original film — was asked about James Cameron’s directing process. He said, “Jim creates this imaginary world and we film it,. It’s not like he’s gone in and knows exactly how the day is going to progress or how the month or the scene is going to progress. We have a feeling about where we want to take the scene, how we want the thing to feel, but when you’re filming it, this essence of acting or movie-making… And the challenge is letting yourself go there and not blocking yourself.”


“Totally,’ said actor Stephen Lang, also on the panel and a returnee from the first movie. “And I always say it’s acting at its most fundamental. The least of the difficulties or obstacles in performance capture to me have to do with the gear, the stuff that you have to put on. When you put that on, that’s putting on your wardrobe. I’m getting in costume when I do that. But what is required is a collective understanding of what the situation is, a shared imaginary circumstance which is being specifically delineated by the director. But essentially, you are in a rehearsal room.”

Lang, a theater actor, took a beat. “You are Lear on the heath, you know. A bare stage is where you’re at. Did you get that?. Is my agent here?” he asked rhetorically, knowing he sounded too ponderous.

“Fucked up,” Worthington said under his breath, gently mocking Lang, who has Tony and Drama Desk nominations on his resume.

Which interrupted Cameron’s train of thought. “I don’t know what I was saying. I have the concentration of a goldfish at this point. I was saying something good, though.”

“Bare stage, Lear on the heath,” Worthington again repeated softly as if it say, don’t take this too seriously.

James Cameron picked up: “It’s this collective imagination… it’s such a collaborative kind of thing to do.”

As much as “Avatar” is in the technology vanguard, it’s also a movie with characters who have relatable experiences and feelings Cameron stressed, when asked how he wanted audiences to feel after watching the film: “I haven’t gotten asked that question yet… First of all, because I’m a pretty logical person, so I’m writing and I get hung up on logic, and I’ve got to just write everything and set it all up. And we go through the shooting process and then the editing process, and I wanted to take a lot of things out.

“And I realized, it’s like that game where you can keep pulling things out and the tower doesn’t fall down,” he said, referring to the game, Jenga. 

“But it starts right at the beginning, with that blank page. First thing I did when I put together the team of writers who were going to write movie two, movie three, movie four, and movie five, we put together a team to do them all. And they’re all written through the end of the movie five. We challenged ourselves at the beginning to figure out how did that first film work again.


“Because it really hit every culture and every language group across all different cultures around the world. So it had to have been at some universal level of the human heart or the human experience. And we tried to quantify it before we even started writing it because we didn’t want to miss that…In science fiction, there’s some great stuff out there, but sometimes it lacks heart. And so we really put a kind of extra emphasis on that in the writing process. And as the writers, we fell in love with the characters. I knew who I was writing for with Sam and with Zoe, and with Sigourney, and with Stephen Lang.”

As you’d expect from Cameron and the subtitle, the water scenes are spectacular; they are where Cameron is in his element. The sea creatures are ethereal and funky, including a sad-eyed whale that responds to sign language and (spoiler alert) becomes heroic in the final battle scene, which is so maximalist you wonder how Cameron will top it it in Avatars to come.

As to how he created this world, Cameron said: “You get together a shit-hot team of artists, step one. And you just start saying, “All right, what could this look like?” And we didn’t even have a script yet. I had a treatment. So I asked them all to read the treatment, then we just sat around and talked about it and just started figuring, okay, what does our island culture look like, and what do the people look like? Get the character design team to start figuring that out. I gave them one edict, which was no Creature from the Black Lagoon has webbed hands. We’re not doing webbed hands.”

It’s December 29th, and Mariah’s Christmas Song– And All the Others– Is Gone from the Charts

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It’s only four days after Christmas, but the party is over.

December 29th– Mariah Carey’s “All I Want for Christmas” — talked about endlessly for one week — is gone. Gone from iTunes top charts, no longer being streamed on Spotify’s top 50.

Also gone are all the other freaking Christmas songs like “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree” and “Jingle Bell Rock.”

Poof!

Kudos to Mariah for milking Christmas like crazy starting around December 10th. There are endless stories during this slow news period about Mariah as the Queen of Christmas and the record being the greatest thing since sliced bread.

And then, as Christmas ebbed, the real writer of the song, Walter Afanasieff, burned Mariah’s playhouse down. He fessed up in podcast about how the song was written, what her participation really was, and that they haven’t spoken — except briefly over a legal matter– in two decades.

Plus Mariah’s being sued by the writer of a song with the same title released four years before her record.

And that’s a wrap. Are people gullible? Oh boy, are they!

Kennedy Center TV Audience Grows by 1 Million Viewers with U2, George Clooney, Gladys Knight, Amy Grant

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The push to get the audience numbers up for the Kennedy Center Honors paid off last night.

Ratings were just over 5 million total, and that’s an increase from last year by about 1 million. The key demo was the same as last year, 0.4.

The audience came for the inductees which included a mega rock band, U2, an R&B goddess, Gladys Knight. a country superstar Amy Grant. Then there was also George Clooney, beloved movie and TV star who’s had a big hit all fall with “Ticket to Paradise.”

So this was a payoff, the first real TV hit for the producers and Kennedy Center since they forced George Stevens, Jr. out after 37 years. (He’s the one who deserves an honor, btw.)

So who’s still not in? Burt Bacharach, which is criminal; Jane Fonda, absolutely; the Rolling Stones, who keep dodging the honors; Clive Davis (now that Berry Gordy is in, Clive should be next), and Denzel Washington.

Exclusive: Jennifer Hudson Surprises Common, Cast Backstage at Broadway Hit “Riverside and Crazy”

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The audience at Broadway’s Helen Hayes Theater turned out en masse for actor/rapper Common making his debut in the hit, Between Riverside and Crazy. They were not disappointed.

That would include Jennifer Hudson, who flew out from Chicago, where she’s been during the holidays, to see her friend get a standing ovation. And Common wasn’t the only actor turning in a great performance last night. “Riverside” is led by the great actor Stephen McKinley Henderson, making his own sort of debut on Broadway — as a leading man.

Henderson originated the role of Pops in “Riverside” back in 2015 at the Atlantic Theater Company to rave reviews. Playwright Stephen Adly Gurgis wrote it for him. Now, seven years later, the production has finally arrived on Broadway with Common playing Junior, Pops’ son, and a magnificent supporting cast that includes a bunch of scene stealers including Michael Rispoli, Rosal Colón, Victor Almanzar, and Elizabeth Canavan. Austin Pendleton, everyone’s favorite director, herds them into perfection.

Henderson is a veteran of August Wilson’s plays, receiving a Tony nomination in 2010 for “Fenches.” You’ve seen him in countless movies. But “Riverside” will be his legacy. Pops, the central character of the play, is a wise cracking, straight talking curmudgeon but much more: as a retired cop and Navy man, he’s developed some fantasies about his accomplishments. But his time as a policeman was ended by a shooting incident resulting in a lawsuit with the city that hasn’t ended over 8 years of haggling. What is the truth of the incident? We’re going to find out.

Gurgis is smart in this play. It concerns racism and ageism, sure. But you know, “Between Riverside and Crazy” is a New York play because at its heart it’s about real estate. Forget all the social stuff: Pops is hanging onto a huge rent stabilized apartment on Riverside Drive. Gurgis strikes a note for the audience not in the humor, or injustice, but because once you have an apartment in Manhattan you’re not leaving it. Period.

Blue Business: “Avatar Way of Water” Running 27% Ahead of First Movie on 12th Day

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Well, it’s hard to swallow. But the Water is finding its way.

“Avatar 2” on its 12th day of release is running 27% ahead of the first “Avatar.”

On the 12th day of release, “Avatar” had $250 million banked. We thought that was a lot!

But the new one was up to $317 million yesterday. All told it’s got over $1 billion earned around the world including the US.

Lack of competition is a key reason. Audiences are not going to the smaller movies, and there’s nothing else of its size out there. “Avatar 2” has clear sailing for weeks and Disney will make the most of it.

Don’t be blue: more movies must be coming soon. Cross fingers!

PS Heck! Maybe I’ll even go see it this weekend.

Grammy Voting Ends January 4th: Bonnie Raitt Only Songwriter Nominee Who Wrote Her Song Alone Without a Committee

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The Grammy Award voting ends on January 4th. If you’re a voter, and take this stuff seriously, that means time is running out.

The top nominations went to likely suspects: Harry Styles, Adele, Beyonce, Lizzo, etc. They’re today’s stars, that’s appropriate.

But three artists over the age of 50 who made it to the finals deserve some attention.

The first one is Bonnie Raitt. The veteran rocker and blues maven has four nominations for her album, “Just Like That.” The title track is nominated for Song of the Year. Among the all the nods in that category, “Just Like That” is the only one written by a sole songwriter. All the others are teams, many overlapping with other artists’ teams. Think of that. The song is gorgeous, it’s an actual original composition and not sampled from anything.

Raitt has three other nods for that album including Best Americana album, song, and performance of the year. She deserves all three.

The great Judy Collins is known as a master interpreter of other people’s songs, Think of Joni Mitchell’s “Both Sides Now” or Stephen Sondheim’s “Send in the Clowns.” Her version of the Rolling Stones’ “Salt of the Earth” is a classic.

But this last year, Collins released her first album of self-composed songs, “Spellbound” is spellbinding. She should have done this a long time ago! The production is rich, Collins’ voice — naturally — is its own symphony. And the songs – the title track especially and “When I Was a Girl in Colorado” — should easily win her Best Folk Album. Don’t miss it.

Finally, Elvis Costello. He won a Grammy two years ago for “Look Now,” a late career masterpiece The 2020 release won in Traditional Pop Album. OK. For me, it was Album of the Year. Two years later he returns with “The Boy Named If,” nominated for Best Rock Album. Where “Look Now” was full of soul and melody, “The Boy Named If” crunches. The melodies and wordplay are there, of course. But Costello and the Imposters rave away in “Farewell OK,” the best rock song of 2022 without a doubt. “The Man You Love to Hate” is a Costello classic. If we still had rock radio on FM we’d be hearing all the songs from this album day and night. Play them on Spotify. You’ll fall in love with all of them.

“Babylon” With Brad Pitt and Margot Robbie Isn’t the First Huge Box Office Disaster, and It Won’t Be the Last

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Damien Chazelle’s “Babylon” is a huge disaster at the box office. We knew this was coming some time ago.

The three hour catastrophe starring Brad Pitt and Margot Robbie cost $250 million and made less than $5 million over the holiday weekend. Paramount will take a write down for the total amount and life will go on.

I’m seeing all kinds of panicky upset notices about this on Twitter. You know, the movie biz is full of these failures, and there will be more. That’s the way it goes.

Back in 1960, “Cleopatra” with Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton came raining down on its studio. It was the “biggest failure of all time.” Everyone lived.

In 1973, I remember as a teen reading about Ross Hunter’s “Lost Horizon,” which nearly toppled Columbia Pictures.

Then there was “Heaven’s Gate,” which sent United Artists into a frenzy. Coming so soon after Watergate, the word “gate” got added onto anything that was a scandal or a massive failure.

Let’s not forget “Ishtar,” Elaine May’s “passion project,” derided and dismissed just like “Babylon.” Some people went to see it just to see where the money was misspent. And on sand dunes, no less!

There are several dozen more examples of Babylonian disasters. The average loss is $100 million, for movies like Kevin Costner’s “The Postman” and even Steven Spielberg’s “The BFG.” We don’t know what “Amsterdam” lost this year. How about Will Smith’s “After Earth.” John Travolta’s “Battlefield Earth”? Remember “John Carter” and “The Lone Ranger”? We’ve been here before: Francis Ford Coppola’s “One from the Heart” comes to mind. Al Pacino in “Bobby Deerfield.” And so on.

“Babylon” may be the the biggest loss ever at $250 million. But believe me, there’s something out there, it hasn’t been made yet, which will top it one day.

What was the problem here? Too many characters and no one to root for. Margot Robbie’s Nellie looked like a Studio 54 crasher and was played like she was Harley Quinn. The rest of the characters were deeply negative. And the orgy scenes– no one at Paramount saw them in dailies and said ‘no’? No one?

So “Babylon” will go into the history books and we will shake our heads. It’s too bad– we really needed both “Babylon” and “Amsterdam” in this very mediocre season.

Tesla Stock Price Plummeting to New Lows Today Over Production Slowdown and that Other Thing

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keep refreshing…

Tesla hit a new all time low, dropping 11.4% from last Friday.

Will Smith’s Non-Apology Tour Didn’t Work: Reviewers Didn’t Like Emancipation and Neither Did Viewers

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Will Smith went on quite a bender of media last month and early this one. He went around not apologizing for anything and trying to get people to watch his $100 million movie, “Emancipation.”

It didn’t work.

The Antoine Fuqua directed black and white movie (literally) about a tragic true story of a Civil War era slave has been a bust.

On Rotten Tomatoes, critics slammed it, with a 45% rotten rating. But even worse, audiences posting to Rotten Tomatoes gave “Emancipation” a lowly 56%. No one liked it.

“Emancipation” is playing on Apple TV Plus now, long gone from theaters after its one week eligibility run. Eligible for what, one might ask? Awards groups have ignored it, and the movie will just fall into ignominy. How much is the write off? Apple will never say, but the whole thing was a disaster.

Was the film rejected solely because of Smith’s egregious behavior last spring at the Oscars? No. It was also because the movie just wasn’t good. But the reaction to it was definitely a signal that no one is willing to forgive and forget any time soon.

Attention Tourists: Dollywood CLOSED Today, Was Only Open 9 to 5 Yesterday Because of Brutal Cold and Ice in Pigeon Forge

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TODAY TUES DEC 27: Dollywood is closed today, and hopes to reopen tomorrow.
YESTERDAY: It’s 26 degrees and snowing in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee right now.

So Dollywood will only be open from 9 to 5. I’m surprised those aren’t the regular hours!

Attractions like the Mystery Mine, Lightning Rod, and the one where three office workers string up their boss to a garage door are all closing early!

Tourists will have to bundle up in their cabins or whatever. And wherever Dolly Parton is, let’s hope she’s warm and cozy!